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Law/Justice
Herbert Douglas, Ph.D. Professor
Biography: Dr. Herbert Douglas is a social scientist who holds the Ph.D. degree from the University of Toledo. Given that the Department of Law and Justice Studies offers an academic program with a dual focus on Criminal Justice and Social Justice, his primary responsibilities for teaching and research lie in criminology and social justice. In 2005, Dr. Douglas published �Migration and Adaptations of African American Families within Urban America,� in Minority Voices: Linking Personal Ethnic History and the Sociological Imagination (Edited by John Myers and Published by Allyn & Bacon) and Taking Sides: Clashing Views on Controversial Issues in Race and Ethnicity, (with Raymond D�Angelo and Published by McGraw-Hill). He is currently working on a book-length monograph concerning civil rights of African Americans. Dr. Douglas has had long experience as a civil rights and anti-poverty activist within South Jersey, including his role as the President of the Vineland NAACP and his contributions as a founding member of the SCOPE Anti-Poverty Program for Salem, Cumberland, and Gloucester counties. He is a leading authority on the Civil Rights Movement, especially within this region of the United States.
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